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News Roundup: LinuxWorld grows up

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk reports on LinuxWorld: “Strip away the stock market hype,
and what’s left of Linux? An
operating system that could
conquer the world. The latest
ZDNet coverage from the show
floor .”

Category:

  • Linux

LinuxWorld: Linux gets Bluetoothed

Author: JT Smith

ZDNET.co.uk: “Bluetooth — the short-wave radio
technology designed to replace
cables — is just beginning to trickle
onto the market in Europe, but at the
LinuxWorld show in New York a
number of vendors are showing off
wireless new hardware running the
Linux operating system. “

Category:

  • Linux

LinuxWorld: Pitbull Linux security — worth the hype?

Author: JT Smith

Julie Bresnick

When Argus Systems Group Inc.
announced the release of security systems for Linux during LinuxWorld Thursday, the efforts to stand out were laminated invites, free lunch
for
attendees, which was set up in the press lounge, making for an easy
post-consumption escape. Argus Systems Group announced Pitbull LX Intrusion, and Pitbull Secure
Appliance
Software, and I made it to the tail end of the conference
after
learning of the Linux community’s rationally skeptical reception to any
attempt to
promise absolute impenetrability.

At the door I was greeted by what could only have been a PR
representative
dressed in a bright red pant suit, lipstick to match and a permanent
smile
bigger than my mother’s when I used to return from a month away at
summer camp.
I’m not really sure what she said because the baby voice doesn’t work
as well
in a whisper. There were about 25 people in the room
including the
two people on the camera, three at microphones and the Avon Lady by the
door.

Tim Dicks of eWeek was at
the
podium when I entered. He looked like Kenneth Branaugh with red hair
and was
giving a report on the results of Openhack
III
, a two-week event in which the hacker community was invited to
penetrate
the mock ISP system constructed and protected by Pitbull LX. (Here are the results of Openhack III.) In
Openhack I
penetration, defined by adding a file to the root directory, was
achieved by
the end of the first day, and in Openhack II, by the end of the first week.
Openhack III apparently ended after two weeks without ultimate
intrusion.

The Argus Systems Group crew gave the spin, along with an Openhack souvenir lock, boxed and
delivered
in a small velvet bag with a satin drawstring.

Afterward, a few suits swarmed the front of the room, and I rushed
out to
consult someone with longer hair and a less glossy veneer.

“A lot of the stuff is covered by the Linux Kernel package LIDS,” said Jon Lasser, senior systems
administrator for SkyNetWEB, a
subsidiary of Affinity Internet,
in
Baltimore, Md. “The ability to compartmentalize is not standard with
LIDS but
is available with FreeBSD Jails.”

Like LIDS, Pitbull offers the fine grain access control but,
according to
Lasser, LIDS is not yet ready for use on productions systems. Like
Jails,
Pitbull allows administrators to implement multiple systems on
a single
box, as if there were several computers on the same server.

The back of the invitation to the press conference shows a picture
of a
pitbull which looks menacingly similar to the presa canarios that
mauled to
death a woman in San Francisco just a week before.

Pitbull may offer both features in one system but, says Lasser, one
can’t
really know without taking a closer look. “If this is as easy to
implement on a
production system as they say it is, then that is an advantage. If it
works,
it’s worthwhile and there is a market for it.”

And anyway, any system that “works” is only as good as the time it
takes for
crackers to find a way around it, even if you do distract them with a
free
lunch.

Pricing starts at $5,000 per processor and goes up from there with
discounts
for quantity. Lasser says that seems “a little bit high” for tools available for free in Linux and BSD.

NewsForge editors read and respond to comments posted on our discussion page.

Category:

  • Linux

Inter-process communication in PHP

Author: JT Smith

pkej writes zez.org: about code – Luis Argerich (Salutia.com) has written an introductory article to IPC. He explains the usage of shared memory and semaphores in PHP.”

MS bug of the day: Triggering errors with Excel 2000

Author: JT Smith

MSNBC tells us: “Opening a Microsoft Excel 2000 workbook may trigger this error:
“The instruction at “0x3005ca13” referenced memory at
“0x00000018”. The memory could not be “written”.”

LWE: Soft Image demos Linux version

Author: JT Smith

For all you aspiring animation geeks out there, says Maximum Linux, who want to design the next state of the art movie that will follow in the footsteps of
Jurassic Park or Men In Black but don’t wanna leave your Linux box behind, good news, we saw the first-ever demo of Soft Image 3D running on none other
than a super-fast Linux box running on an AMD processor.

Category:

  • Linux

Microsoft experiences e-mail delays

Author: JT Smith

CNET reports that Microsoft employees say outgoing e-mail from company accounts took as long
as four days to reach recipients last week.

Take the long view on Linux

Author: JT Smith

Anonymous Reader writes “An interesting commentary on the state of the media and on the future of Linux.

Take the Long View

Category:

  • Linux

Red Hat CEO details Linux services push

Author: JT Smith

From CNET: “The Red Hat Network is more than a subscription system for keeping Linux
computers updated–it’s also a potential tool for enabling computer makers such as IBM to
resell Red Hat’s services.”

Category:

  • Linux

Around the world of Linux

Author: JT Smith

Wired.com reports: “The Linux OS is still in its adolescence, with so much promise but still a little too gangly to be gracefully accepted in the bigger world. So it is at LinuxWorld, a friendly — if somewhat awkward — place.”

Category:

  • Linux